SKU: 13638356439

Tutoring Club Franchise Investment Pitch Deck 2026

Sale price$26.10 Regular price$29.00
Save 10%

Pay in installments of $7.25 with ShopPay, AfterPay and Klarna

Shipping Estimate
USA
  • USA
  • CAN

Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 17 - Jul 22

Promo Codes Available:

For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15

Description

Tutoring Club Franchise Investment Pitch Deck 2026What Does the Tutoring Club Franchise Pitch Deck Contain? This franchise unit pitch deck template includes 13 essential building blocks covering everything from local market potential to a full ROI analysis for franchises. [dynamic_pic1] Problem Defines market pain [dynamic_pic2] Solution Explains your fix [dynamic_pic3] Market Quantifies opportunity size [dynamic_pic4] Business Model Shows revenue engine [dynamic_pic5] Competition Highlights

What Does the Tutoring Club Franchise Pitch Deck Contain?

This franchise unit pitch deck template includes 13 essential building blocks covering everything from local market potential to a full ROI analysis for franchises.

[dynamic_pic1]

Problem

Defines market pain

[dynamic_pic2]

Solution

Explains your fix

[dynamic_pic3]

Market

Quantifies opportunity size

[dynamic_pic4]

Business Model

Shows revenue engine

[dynamic_pic5]

Competition

Highlights competitive edge

[dynamic_pic6]

Founding Team

Proves operator credibility

[dynamic_pic7]

Traction

Demonstrates market momentum

[dynamic_pic8]

Fundraising

Details capital use

Six Questions Your Tutoring Club Franchise Pitch Deck Must Answer

We built this franchise unit pitch deck in Microsoft PowerPoint format using our own research on the supplemental education sector. All pitch deck slides are pre-populated with researched data specific to this franchise unit, including a year-one revenue target of $458,000 and year-five EBITDA of $251,000. It defintely helps to have these metrics ready for your lender presentation so you can focus on the local execution.

Why now, and what urgent local customer need does this franchise unit address?

Families in high-growth areas are desperate for academic gap remediation that actually works as school class sizes increase. With a focus on personalized learning paths, this unit addresses the specific achievement goals of professional households in your community.

Market Urgency

  • High-achievement family goals
  • Academic gap remediation
  • Post-pandemic learning loss
[dynamic_pic9]

What does this unit offer, and why is its solution better than local alternatives?

This model uses proprietary diagnostic software to create hyper-personalized paths instead of a generic, one-size-fits-all curriculum. It offers a motivational club-like environment that increases student engagement and encourages long-term enrollment compared to clinical competitors.

The Solution

  • Data-driven learning paths
  • Motivational club atmosphere
  • Specialized SAT/ACT prep
[dynamic_pic10]

Who buys from this unit, and how big is the local opportunity?

The primary customers are achievement-oriented families and busy professional households within a five-mile geographic radius. In this model, year-one revenue is projected at $458,000, scaling to $825,000 by year five as you capture local market share.

Target Audience

  • Professional Research Triangle parents
  • K-12 students in WCPSS
  • $458k Year 1 revenue
[dynamic_pic11]

How does this unit make money, and what are the core revenue streams?

Revenue flows from recurring tuition, SAT/ACT workshops, and diagnostic fees, with recurring tuition projected to hit $220,000 in the first year. The model is built for a 3-year payback period, maintaining a 10% royalty and 1% marketing fund contribution.

Revenue Streams

  • Recurring tuition fees
  • $60k workshop revenue
  • 10% royalty structure
[dynamic_pic12]

Who are the local competitors, and what is this unit's edge?

You will compete with national tutoring chains and local private tutors, but your edge is the proprietary software and school partnerships. Most competitors lack the high-touch monthly consultations and motivational environment that drive student buy-in.

Competitive Edge

  • Proprietary diagnostic software
  • Private school partnerships
  • High-touch parent consultations
[dynamic_pic13]

How much funding is required, and what milestones will be unlocked?

You need capital for the $34,500 franchise fee and $45,000 in leasehold improvements to get the center operational. Reaching breakeven by March 2026 is the first major milestone, followed by achieving a 5.43% Internal Rate of Return by year five.

Funding and Milestones

  • $34,500 franchise fee
  • March 2026 breakeven
  • 3-year payback target

Finance: update unit break-even and payback model by Friday.

[dynamic_pic14]

Tutoring Club Franchise Pitch Deck Template Features & Benefits

Pre-Written and Customizable Slide Deck 

This franchise unit pitch deck is pre-written and pre-structured to save you dozens of hours of manual research and formatting. It provides a professional presentation format that you can edit in PowerPoint to fit your specific territory, funding requirements, or local market data. Using a franchise business plan template ensures you don't miss the critical details lenders expect to see.

  • Editable slides: Modify text and charts easily in PowerPoint
  • Pre-written content: Industry-specific data is already included
  • PowerPoint-ready format: Professional design for immediate use

Clear Revenue Model 

The template includes a dedicated revenue model slide to show exactly how your unit generates cash through recurring tuition and specialized workshops. This makes it easier to explain pricing logic and unit economics so investors can quickly understand the path to revenue growth. Visualizing the educational service business model helps bridge the gap between abstract plans and daily cash flow.

  • Revenue drivers: Clear view of tuition and workshop fees
  • Pricing logic: Structured approach to service fees
  • Unit economics view: Detailed breakdown of store-level margins

Market Insights and Competitive Positioning 

Understanding local demand is vital for any education franchise opportunity. These slides help you map out customer profiles and local trends to prove why your location will win against competitors. You can easily document local market potential in local communities to show lenders you have a defensible edge in the territory.

  • Local market insights: Data-driven view of neighborhood demand
  • Competitive landscape: Analysis of local tutoring centers
  • Positioning logic: Why your center wins the market

Investor-Focused Design and Layout 

We designed this deck with a clean, professional layout to ensure your financial data and startup capital requirements stand out. The slides are structured to tell a clear story, helping you communicate the opportunity without needing advanced design skills. It is the ideal PowerPoint templates for franchise startup funding requests.

  • Clean slide layout: Modern design that emphasizes key data
  • Clear story flow: Logical progression from market to exit
  • Professional style: Built for bank and investor meetings

Unique Value Proposition Slide 

Use this slide to articulate why families will choose your center over local alternatives, focusing on personalized learning paths and student engagement. This slide helps build a clear investment story for your franchise unit business proposal. It highlights the specific benefits that drive long-term enrollment and brand loyalty.

  • Customer value angle: Focus on student academic results
  • Local differentiation: What sets your center apart
  • Clear investment story: Why this unit is a winner

How to Use the Template

Download and Open:

Get instant access to your pitch deck by downloading the template in PowerPoint or Google Slides. Open it in your preferred software and start customizing immediately.

Customize with Your Details:

Easily personalize each slide by replacing the placeholder text with your business information, market insights, and key financial details, ensuring the deck aligns perfectly with your vision.

Complete Financial Projections:

Review and adjust the financial slides to align with your revenue model, cost breakdown, and funding needs, ensuring investors receive a clear and professional financial overview.

Finalize Your Pitch Deck:

Refine your presentation for clarity and impact, ensuring it tells a compelling story about your business, highlights your competitive edge, and makes a strong case for investment.

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 13638356439

Discover Niche Categories That Outsell

Top-Converting Item to Boost Your Average Order

4.5 ★★★★★
Based on 11 reviews
Sort
Highest Rating
Newest First
Oldest First
Product Reviews
J
Verified Purchase
Jonathan Bailey
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Required Reading for Egyptologists
Format: Paperback
To say the very least, this book is an enlightening read. The author attempts to design a new chronology of Egypt based on a number of archaeological observations he made which pointed to certain anomolies in the standard chronology of the Third Intermediate Period of Egyptian history. The TIP is one of those points in history where information is scanty and there is much room for error in interpreting existing archaeological evidence. Rohl posits that the 21st and 22nd pharaonic dynasties were at least partly contemprary in a period of balkanization of Egypt, contrary to the conventional chronology's view that they were successive. He therefore shifts the entire preceding dynastic histories downward from 200 to 300 years. That is, what we previously though to occur at 1250 BC actually happened at 1000 BC according to Rohl. In so doing Rohl has done much to synchronize Egyptian chronology with the chronology of the bible. Rohl claims that the Amarna letters were not to be compared to Joshua's conquest of Canaan, a period where they clearly do not fit, but rather tell the tale of Saul's and David's claiming of Israel from Phillistine Egyptian vassals. He synchonizes Ramesses II's conquests of Asia Minor with the biblical invasion of Shishak. Also, he identifies the Egyptian 'Hyksos' with the Amalekites of the book of Exodus. There are many other enlightening points of connection with the bible that Rohl makes, but my point here is not to explain them all. The true value of this book for any egyptologist, student of biblical history, or any student of the ancient world at all, is this book's popular presentation of the field of archaeology and ancient history. So rare are books that actually connect a lay reader with the methodologies and evidence upon which researchers base their works. In order to show a need for a revision of Egyptian chronology, Rohl shows how the entirety of Egyptian chronology depends on all but of a handful of archaeological finds, many of them of dubious reliability. Even if Rohl's opponents find more pieces of evidence supporting the standard chronology, the number will still be very small and they will quite likely be as subject to interpretation, as are the ones that Rohl has pointed out. Rohl goes to great lengths to show the history of the observations that scholarship has made, thereby showing us where they may have gone wrong. (As a popular book, I must confess that parts of Rohl's historical narratives depict events in which one expects to find Indiana Jones) Next, when building his own chronology, Rohl puts us close to the texts and archaeological evidence upon which he bases his theories. Rohl's conclusions are in many cases impressive, but in some cases I had to shake my head and come to the conclusion that he was grasping at straws. For instance, I believe that his work in astronomical retrocalulations to find the dates of eclipses recorded in ancient texts is pretty shaky. I even doubt that the text that he is talking about is even mentioning an eclipse. This information has proved to be incredibly valuable to me, however, as I now know that astronomy based chronology, something I though would give absolute and undisputable dates, is as foggy an area of research as any. I do not know if I will eventually embrace Rohl's ideas or not, or if partially. I do know that reading this book has shown me the types of reasoning and observations that old world historians make, and can now make an informed decision about how firm our grip on dating events of the past is. My conclusion: if somebody tells you some biblical event did not happen because the dates don't line up with scientific knowledge, don't be disheartened. We have a LONG way to go before we can truly be confident about such statements, if indeed we will ever arrive at that sort of knowledge. This uncertainty that I have gained from Rohl's book is corroberated by the "Oxford History of Ancient Egypt" which provides wonderful information on Egyptian chronology. Everyone who wants to study ancient history, whether it be Egyptian, biblical, Middle Eastern, or even Chinese for that matter, should read this book, so the next time they read somewhere that 'such and such happened at 3200 BC', they will know to take that statement with a grain of salt. Whether Rohl is right or not, I am forever indebted to him for showing me how chronologists operate. Lastly, I would like to say, after all this talk about archaeology and methodology of Egyptologists, that this book is very readable and comprehensible to the lay reader. Though a smattering of knowledge of biblical and/or Egyptian history will make the book more interesting to the reader, no such knowledge is required in order to understand the book or find value in it. It is truly a popular book intended for the average interested person. I recommend it to all.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2001
S
Verified Purchase
Stone Dog
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Exciting reinterpretation of ancient history.
Format: Paperback
In "Pharoahs And Kings", author David Rohl offers the reader a stunning new interpretation of the events of the ancient world in Egypt and the Levant. In doing so, he ties in Biblical events to their proper place in history. This is a stunning reordering of events and personalities and brings both Egyptian and Biblical history to a much closer synchronization. The book begins in Egypt where Rohl lays out his evidence for condensing the chronology of Egypt. Though we use AD/BC as a method of numbering our years, the ancients did not do so and used regnal dates ("In the third year of Pharoah So-And-So's reign, something happened."). By counting all Pharoahs and their reign lengths, historians felt they had a handle on when, according to our dating system, things happened. When they did so, they discovered the events portrayed in the Bible didn't match. When they date Solomon's reign in Israel to the Iron Age, for example, they find economic development to be poor - a far cry from the Biblical accounts of Solomon's reign as a flowering of culture and rich in trade. Likewise, Jericho's walls did not fall in the time period most historians would place the Exodus and entrance into the Levant of the Hebrews. Therefore, the Biblical accounts are simply myth, nothing more. David Rohl is a historian, not a religious believer and his point of view is as a historian. His focus is to find a more accurate timeline for the events in the ancient Middle East. He begins in Egypt because that is his area of expertise and he gives convincing arguements for re-ordering the events of Egypt. The clincher, for me, was the tombs of Tanis (among other inconsistencies in the conventional dating such as the number of Apis Bulls) in which the tomb of Psusennes I cuts into the tomb of King Oskoron II and was obviously built after the tomb of Oskoron II. The problem? Oskoron II was from the 22nd dynasty while Psusennes was from the 21st! It is quite obviously reversed! Rohl's conclusion is that two dynasties were contemporary and that about 140 years needs to be removed from the timeline of Egypt. When this is done, events in the Levant match the events in the Old Testament very closely. In the New Chronology, Jericho falls just when the Hebrews are entering Canaan according to the Bible. Solomon's Israel is now placed in the Late Bronze Age where there is evidence of prosperous cities and flourishing trade. There is evidence of mentions of both Saul and David in the Amarna Letters. This was a page turner and Rohl's work, although controversial, is backed up by fact and evidence. There is less evidence for some of his conclusions than others (in my mind), but it is well researched and never strays from a scholarly interpretation of the evidence written and on the ground. I actually enjoyed this book! David Rohl writes in a very engaging fashion, often using humor. His writing skill keeps subjects that may seem dull very frsh and exciting. He often uses humor and engages the reader, challenges the reader and forces the reader to think. This is not the usual dry tome on archeology that puts you to sleep! He assists the reader with many and high quality photos and drawings of the evidence and includes "side bars" with definitions and explanations in the margins to help the layman navigate the technical aspects of history and archeology without getting bogged down and overwhelmed. This is a fine book and more than deserving of five stars. It's a very eye-opening and interesting read that doesn't seem like a college textbook. Instead, he challenges the reader while entertaining at the same time. I recommend this book with five stars!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2012
A
Verified Purchase
Amazon Customer
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
Great book. Not an easy read but worth going ...
Format: Hardcover
Wish I had known about this book when it was published! Great book. Not an easy read but worth going thru more than once with great info. I have long held the belief of the early exodus date due to the Great Pyramid dating. Have read in many books about the confusion of the Egyptian chronology but this is the first one I've seen that really opens it up for examination.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2016
P
Verified Purchase
PhiloX
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 4
A Lost Book doesn't Make Up for Lost Time
Format: Paperback
I bought the hard back copy of this book years ago & what an interesting read with great time lines & beautiful color photos. Someone borrowed the book & I forgot who I loaned it to. After years of trying to remember where it went, I at last bought it again as a paper back through Amazon.com. It's a used book with no marks & only a slight indentation on a few pages on the side. Now that I am looking into it & remembering it once again, I am over loaded with too many historical theories. Maybe it's my fault for being a book reader rather than an Egyptologist. I am going to write down some simple time frame theories & you will see what this book is about: General View: The Hebrews came into Egypt through reuniting Joseph & his brothers. They experienced the Amarna period of primitive Monotheism. Akhenaton was over thrown & polytheism was reinstated as the Hebrews were enslaved. Moses came during Rameses II & the Exodus was during the last years of Rameses II or the Pharaoh Marneptah. Amarna period of Akhenaton 1352-1337/1334 BC Rameses II 1279-1213 BC Exodus last years of Rameses II or Marneptah. Problems: Biblical History is off by 180 years if counted back from the creation of Solomon's temple. Rameses II was a great conquer, & both he & his son Marneptah never wrote of 10 plagues or an Exodus. Both died as old men & their mummys are still with us. David Rohl's Theory: revised Egyptian history by shortening the 3rd Intermediate Period by almost 300 years. Tutimaios known as Dudimose is the Pharaoh of the Exodus Exodus 1447 BC Amarna period of Akhenaton = time of King David approx. 1000 BC. Proof: letters written between an Egyptian Pharaoh & King of Israel during that period. Rameses II = Shishak of 921 BC sack of Jerusalem. Proof: Rameses II used a monogram that comes close to Shishak. Problems: goes against establish Egyptian time frames or "If the Bible doesn't fit the Egyptian time frames then make the Egyptian time frames fit the Bible". Akhenaton is no longer the 1st political monotheist & seems out of place not influencing Moses & writing letters to King David. From Another Book I Read - "Akhenaton & Moses" by Ahmed Osman Ahmed Osman's Theory: Akhenaton is the same person as Moses Amarna period of Akhenaton 1352-1337/1334 BC Exodus after the overthrow of Akhenaton by Rameses I Problems: Moses doesn't die overlooking the Promise land of Canaan as stated in Deuteronomy 34 but dies without a known grave as did Akhenaton. Moses monotheism doesn't deal with a solar disc as a symbol of the one God or a replacement of a lesser Egyptian God, but is from an inherited convent. Other Dates of the Exodus: Josephus 1552 BC Sedar Olam Rabbah 1440 BC Book of Jubilees 2410 BC Early Church Fathers 1570 to 1320 BC I need to research Immanuel Velikovsky ideas on this subject matter. I just bought the book & will review it.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2013
A
Verified Purchase
Amazon Customer
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Correcting the Biblical Chronology
Format: Hardcover
When I first begin my study of the Bible, I had purchased another book on archaeology and the first thing I realized is that nothing fit. The time of Solomon was impoverishment in Israel. When you read the Bible Solomon was the richest king ever. David Rohl's book Pharaohs and Kings changed all that. He persuasively shows where the chronology is wrong and when corrected things fall into place. What is commonly called the old testament comes to life. It is the greatest book on Biblical Archaeology ever written. Thank you David !!!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2019

recommand products